Toluene reacts as a normal aromatic hydrocarbon towards
electrophilic aromatic substitution.The methyl group makes it around
25 times more reactive than benzene in such reactions.

It undergoes smooth sulfonation to give p-toluenesulfonic acid, and
chlorination by Cl2 in the presence of FeCl3 to give ortho and para
isomers of chlorotoluene.

It undergoes nitration to give ortho and para nitrotoluene isomers,
but if heated it can give dinitrotoluene and ultimately the
explosive trinitrotoluene

With other reagents the methyl side chain in toluene may react,
undergoing oxidation. Reaction with potassium permanganate leads to
benzoic acid, whereas reaction with chromyl chloride leads to
benzaldehyde (Étard reaction).

Halogenation can be performed under free radical conditions. For
example, N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) heated with toluene in the
presence of AIBN leads to benzyl bromide.

Catalytic hydrogenation of toluene to methylcyclohexane requires a
high pressure of hydrogen to go to completion, because of the
stability of the aromatic system. pKa is approximately 45.

Usage:

Toluene is an Aromatic chemical produced by Petroleum Refineries/
Petrochemical Plants. Steel plants produce Toluene from the
by-product recovery plant where aromatics are recovered from the
coke oven gas.

Toluene is used mainly in production of various downstream
petrochemicals, pesticides, explosives (Tri-Nitro Toluene),
Adhesives, Saccharins, etc. Besides Toluene finds a major end-use in
paint industry as thinner. Toluene is also used as solvents in
various chemical industries.

Toluene is a parent substance in the manufacture of benzene
derivatives, caprolactam, saccharine, pharmaceuticals, dyes,
perfumes, TNT and detergents. It is used in fuels (anti-knock
additive) and as a solvent for paints and coatings, rubber, resins,
thinners in nitrocellulose lacquers and adhesives.

It serves as a raw material in the manufacture of phenol
(predominantly in Western Europe), benzene, cresol (chiefly Japan)
and a wide range of other substances.

Toluene chemical is also known as phenyl-methane or methyl-benzene.

This chemical is transparent like pure water but not soluble in
water. This has a smell like paint thinners and redolent of the
sweet fragrance alike benzene compound.

Toluene chemicals belong to aromatic hydrocarbon group and are
widely used as solvents and industrial feedstock. Further, these can
be used as inhalant drugs for their intoxicating properties.

Protect against physical damage. Store in a cool, dry
well-ventilated location, away from any area where the fire hazard
may be acute. Outside or detached storage is preferred. Separate
from incompatibles.

Containers should be bonded and grounded for transfers to avoid
static sparks. Storage and use areas should be No Smoking areas. Use
non-sparking type tools and equipment, including explosion proof
ventilation.

Containers of this material may be hazardous when empty since they
retain product residues (vapors, liquid); observe all warnings and
precautions listed for the product.

Note /Government
Notification: These chemicals are designated as those that are
used in the manufacture of the controlled substances and are
important to the manufacture of the substances. For any (Control
Substance) products Import and Export *** subjected to your
country government laws /control substance ACT.
Information: The information on this web page is provided to
help you to work safely, but it is intended to be an overview of
hazards, not a replacement for a full Material Safety Data Sheet
(MSDS). MSDS forms can be downloaded from the web sites of many
chemical suppliers. ,also that the information on the PTCL
Safety web site, where this page was hosted, has been copied
onto many other sites, often without permission. If you have any
doubts about the veracity of the information that you are
viewing, or have any queries, please check the URL that your web
browser displays for this page. If the URL begins "www.tajapi.com/www/Denatonium
Benzoate.htm/" the page is maintained by the Safety Officer in
Physical Chemistry at Oxford University. If not, this page is a
copy made by some other person and we have no responsibility for
it.
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) was enacted into law by the
Congress of the United States as Title II of the Comprehensive
Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970.[1] The CSA is the
federal U.S. drug policy under which the manufacture,
importation, possession, use and distribution of certain
substances is regulated. The Act also served as the national
implementing legislation for the Single Convention on Narcotic
Drugs